Yes, I meant to say proxy server. Either way, the filtering happens on the server(a computer other than the client) side, and not the client side. I've set it up before as well. It seems to me though that Dan's Guardian isn't very useful if it's on the computer to be filtered. To use the proxy server one needs to go into the internet options in Firefox and set up the proxy server. To turn off the filtering, it's as easy as telling firefox to no longer use the proxy server. At least if Dan's Guardian is on a separate computer, internet traffic can be blocked at the router level from the client computer and while traffic still goes to the server computer. I'd rather not have to run a separate computer all of the time just to filter internet access. If there is a way to use Dan's Guardian to filter the computer it's on so it's not easy to get around the filter, I'd be interested in hearing how to do that.
Thanks for the other suggestions. I'm going to look into those. Jay On 1/2/07, Shawn Willden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tuesday 02 January 2007 14:26, Jay Askren wrote: > Does anyone know of a good internet filter for linux? I do know about > Dan's Guardian(http://dansguardian.org/) which is a good server filter, but > I'm looking for a client side filter. Dan's Guardian isn't a server filter. It is a proxy server, but there's nothing preventing you from running it on a "client" machine. I experimented with it a while ago, and it seems pretty good, and not difficult to set up. I can help if you need it. In practice, we put the kids' computers in the kitchen, where everyone can see their screens, and just to double check, I occasionally glance through the browser history. Since they don't (yet) realized they can clear the history, that works just fine. We've decided to monitor, rather than filter, and made that clear to our kids. Filtering does have its attractions, though. Our bigger computer-related problems have actually been fights over who got enough computer time, too *much* time on the computer and too much printing. For anyone who's interested, Linux has provided some nice solutions to those problems as well. For the first two, 'timeoutd' has been great. It's a little daemon that monitors the time users spend logged in, and enforces usage policies. My configuration gives each of the kids one hour per day of computer time. There's no more fighting about who's been hogging the computers (there are two), because timeoutd enforces a fair allocation. Also, it imposes a hard limit on the amount of computer play time. If they want to use the computer for educational purposes, they can always ask for a little more time, and I can give it to them. I used quotas to deal with excessive printing for a while, but we've eventually convinced the kids to ask permission when they print more than a page or two, so I've removed the quotas. Shawn. _______________________________________________ Ldsoss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.ldsoss.org/mailman/listinfo/ldsoss
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